Nano Science and Technology Institute - NSTI  
Nano Science and Technology Institute   Home | Subscribe | Site Map  
  ABOUT | COURSES | EVENTS | PUBLICATIONS | LEADERSHIP | OUTREACH | NEWS | PRESS | JOBS | Nanotechnology Solutions
px
px fade_top
Publications
Nanotech 2008 CDROM
Nanotech 2007 CDROM
Nanotech 2006 CDROM
Nanotech 2005 CDROM
Nanotech 2004 CDROM
3 CDROM Special Offer
Nanotech 2008 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2008 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2008 Vol. 3
Nanotech 2007 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2007 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2007 Vol. 3
Nanotech 2007 Vol. 4
Nanotech 2006 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2006 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2006 Vol. 3
Nanotech 2005 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2005 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2005 Vol. 3
WCM 2005
Nanotech 2004 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2004 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2004 Vol. 3
Nanotech 2003 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2003 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2003 Vol. 3
Nanotech 2002 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2002 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2001 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2001 Vol. 2
MSM 2000
MSM 99
MSM 98
Index of Authors
Index of Keywords
Index of Affiliations
Library Request Form
Shopping Cart
Order Form
 
Publications Publications
Nanotech 2005 Vol. 3
p
 
Technical Proceedings of the 2005 NSTI Nanotechnology Conference and Trade Show, Volume 3
Nanotech 2005 Vol. 3
Technical Proceedings of the 2005 NSTI Nanotechnology Conference and Trade Show, Volume 3
 
Chapter 3: Nano Devices and Architectures
 

Spin Density Functional Theory Simulations of Quantum Point Contacts: An Investigation of Spin Filtering Effects

Authors:R. Akis and D.K. Ferry
Affilation:Arizona State University, US
Pages:240 - 243
Keywords:quantum wire, quantum point contact, spin, spintronics
Abstract:We present simulations of quantum wires and quantum point contacts (QPCs) formed in semiconductor heterostructures. Conductance measurements for such structures is quantized with plateaus at integer multiples of G_0= (2e^2/h) as function of gate voltage, a result readily explained by a single electron quantum mechanical theory. More recent experiments however have found additional non-integer plateaus in QPCs and wires, in particular a ~0.7 G_0 conductance anomaly. These require electron-electron interactions to be included to account for them theoretically. Applying spin-density-functional theory (SDFT) to these systems, we obtain ~0.7 G_0 anomalies similar to experiment and find that these features can be correlated with the formation of spin-dependent energy barrier structure which can allow two modes of spin-down electrons to be almost fully transmitted through the channel before spin-up electrons start being allowed through. These barriers, which are largely the result of the exchange potential, rise and fall as function of the local density and one can exploit this to tune the spin-filtering effects. We can also account for additional features such as anomalies at ~0.25 G_0 and “missing” plateaus at higher conductances, features which have also been recently observed.
ISBN:0-9767985-2-2
Pages:786
Hardcopy:$165.00
 
Order:Mail/Fax Form
Special:3 CD Set — 15% off with Free Shipping
Up
nanoPRwire™
nanoPRwire
News Headlines
nano World news
 
 
 
 
px
© Nano Science and Technology Institute     About NSTI | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Contact